Page 26 of Come the Spring (Claybornes' Brides (Rose Hill) 5)
âWhat makes you think you can do what the doctor couldnât?â
âIâm going to try. Thatâs all. I have had some experience nursing the sick. My grandmother was ill for a very long time.â
âWhat happened to her?â
âShe died.â
âSo much for your nursing expertise.â
She lost her temper. âWill you stop being so sarcastic? I simply donât have the time or inclination to deal with it. Come over here and help me. One way or another, Marshal Cooper is going to swallow the medicine.â
âI donât thinkââ
She wouldnât let him finish. âEither help me or stay out of my way. Understood?â
Daniel was astonished by her burst of anger. This was the second time heâd seen her lose her composure. Lady Winthrop, he decided, definitely had a dark side. The discovery made him smile.
Between the two of them, they were able to get most of the medicine down him. She then pulled a chair up next to Cooperâs side and began to apply cold compresses to his forehead.
âYour fever was just as high as his,â she remarked.
âMaybe, but I didnât have a bullet hole in my side, and I wasnât riddled with infection. The doctor says thatâs whatâs going to kill him.â
âWhen did you become such a pessimist?â she asked.
âWhen my wife and daughter were gunned down in a bank.â
The horrifying admission stunned her. She dropped the compress she was holding and watched Daniel restlessly pace in front of the window. She didnât know what to say to him, and all she could think about was not crying in front of him because she knew her reaction would make him angry.
Neither one of them spoke again for almost an hour. Then Grace finally broke the silence. âDo you blame yourself?â
âYes.â
âWhy?â
âI wasnât there to protect them,â he whispered. âThatâs why.â
âI see.â
âArenât you going to argue?â
She picked up the soaked cloth from the basin, wrung the excess water out, and gently placed it on Cooperâs forehead.
âWhat would you like me to say, Daniel? Youâve already made up your mind and condemned yourself because you couldnât stop it from happening. Isnât that right?â
âI wasnât even in town when they died.â
âWere you working?â
âYes.â
âBut if you had been in town, then you would have gone to the bank for your wife? Would you have done that?â
âI donât know. I donât want to talk about it.â
He sprawled out in the chair on the opposite side of the bed. âI should have been there, and I wasnât. Itâs as simple as that.â
âDid you always do the banking business for your wife?â
He shook his head. âNo.â
âDid you do other errands?â
âLike what?â
She shrugged. âLike going into the general store to shop orââ
He interrupted impatiently. âNo, Kathleen did all the shopping.â
âI see.â
âWhat do you see, Grace? Enlighten me.â
She ignored his hostility. âIf your wife and daughter had been killed while they were shopping or while they were walking down the street, you would still blame yourself. I think I understand why. Itâs because youâre a lawman, and itâs your duty to protect the innocent.â
âYes. I should have prevented it from ever happening.â
âBy staying with your family day and night and never letting them out of your sight?â
âI didnât say that.â
âYes, you did.â
He bowed his head. His eyes burned, and he rubbed them with one hand. Then he reached over and turned down the lamp on the table next to him. The orange glow from the flame was irritating him. âYou donât need all this light, do you?â
âNo.â
She was stroking Cooperâs brow while she thought about their conversation. She still hadnât recovered from the stunning news that his family had been murdered.
âIâm surprised you didnât hand your badge back to your superiors,â she remarked. âOr turn to drink after your wife died. Some men do.â
âI didnât. I wanted to die all right, but I figured it would take too long if I tried to drink myself to death. One night, I got my gun and I put the barrel up against my templeâ¦â
âStop it. I donât want to hear this.â
He didnât realize he was breaking her heart by telling her what he had attempted to do. He didnât know how much he meant to her. How could he? She had been cold and so appallingly proper from the moment sheâd met him. Ladies never revealed their true emotions. It wasnât acceptable to let others see a burst of anger or passion or joy. Grace had been well trained by experts, and there were times when she honestly didnât know what she was feeling.
âI obviously didnât have the courage to kill myself,â he said dryly. âIâm still here, arenât I?â
âCourage has nothing to do with it,â she snapped. âKilling yourself is a cowardâs way out. It takes courage to go on.â
âMaybe,â he allowed. âI even thought about trying to get Cole riled up enough to shoot me, but that was before I heard all the stories about him. Heâs far more honorable than I am,â he added.
âSheriff Sloan told me he shot a woman in Abilene. Is that true?â
âAh, he just winged her,â Daniel replied.
She gasped.
âIt was the only way he could get the man who was going to kill her,â he said.
âThen it was necessary?â
âYes.â
âDaniel ⦠do you still think about ⦠it?â
He knew what she was asking. âNo, I donât think about it anymore. Thoughts about doing myself in happened right after I buried my family. I was pretty much out of my mind then.â
âYes, I think maybe you were.â
âI figure there has to be a reason Iâm still around.â
âI think so too,â she whispered.
He was warmed by the fact that she was worried about him. It had been a long time since anyone had been concerned about his welfare. The world had been such a cold place for the past two years ⦠until Grace.
âWhen this is overâ¦â
âYes?â
He shook his head. âNever mind.â
Sheâd been sitting by Cooperâs side for so long her back was aching. She moved the basin of water out of the way and stood up to stretch. What she needed, she decided, was fresh air.
The window was on Danielâs side of the bed. As she tried to walk past him, he reached out and took hold of her hand.
âI thought Iâd open the window.â
He gently pulled her down onto his lap. She was caught off guard and put her hands around his neck before she realized what she was doing. Then she pulled back.
âYou donât want me to open the window?â
âI want you to sit here with me.â
âIt probably isnât very proper.â
âAnd youâre always proper, arenât you?â
The yearning in his eyes was her undoing. She gently stroked his cheek with her fingertips. âI try to be,â she whispered. âMay I ask you something?â
âAnything at all.â
He wanted to wrap her in his arms and hold her for the rest of the night. He didnât know what had come over him, but maybe it was all the talk about Kathleen that made him melancholy and lonely. No, that wasnât true, he admitted. Grace made him feel this way. He had been wanting to hold her from the moment heâd walked into Tilly MacGuireâs kitchen and seen her standing at the counter.
He was tired of fighting the attraction.
âGrace, what I said to you on the train ⦠about wanting you. Does that offend you?â
She didnât answer him. He cupped her chin with his hand and leisurely ran his thumb back and forth across her lower lip. âDoes it?
â he asked again.
She studied him. His eyes were captivating, and she wondered if he had any idea how amazingly handsome and virile he was.
âIâm sorry ⦠What did you ask me?â
He laughed softly. âWhat were you thinking about?â
âHow handsome you are,â she admitted. âIâm glad you want me,â she blurted out. âBut Iâm not Kathleen.â
âNo, youâre not.â
âI canât replace her.â
âI donât want you to replace her. I just wantâ¦â
âYes?â
âYou, Grace. Just you.â
His hand moved to the back of her neck, and he pulled her toward him. âI want to kiss you. Is that all right?â
She loved the fact that heâd asked permission. âYes, Daniel. I want you to kiss me. Iâve waited for such a long time.â
He was stunned by her honesty and felt a tightness in his chest when she shyly put her arms back around his neck.
His mouth captured hers in a kiss that was anything but proper. His touch was possessive, almost violently so, and yet there was a tenderness in the way he coaxed her into responding. His tongue swept inside to taste the sweetness within.
The kiss was long and thorough, but when it ended, he wanted another.
She pulled away and walked to the window, staring vacantly for a full minute before she remembered what sheâd wanted to do. Her hands were trembling, and it took considerable effort to get the lock un-latched and the window up.
When she passed Daniel again, she hoped heâd grab her once more, but he didnât. His eyes were closed, and his head rested against the back of the chair.
She resumed her vigil by Cooperâs side. Daniel slept until the middle of the night and came awake with a start when Cooper began to thrash about. Grace was sitting on the bed, trying to calm him. Her soft voice did the trick, for within seconds Cooper was quiet once again.
âHowâs he doing?â he whispered.
âI canât tell,â she answered. âHeâs fitful, but the fever doesnât seem to be as high.â
âIâll sit with him, Grace. You should try to get some sleep. You look worn out.â
âIâll rest in a little while,â she promised. âMy mind is racing now. Iâve been worrying about Rebecca. Do you think sheâs still alive? I pray she is.â
âI doubt it,â he said. âMy mindâs also racing with questions. I canât figure out why the compartment was empty. It doesnât make any sense.â
âI donât understand.â
He leaned forward and braced his hands on his knees. âThe porter said the compartment Cooper and Rebecca shared looked as though it hadnât been occupied.â
âYes, I remember.â
âSo where are her clothes?â
âCooperâs things were also missing, werenât they?â
âNo,â he answered. âHis saddlebags were in the luggage compartment.â
âMaybe Rebeccaâs satchels were thrown out the window.â
âThe sheriff assured me that he and his men searched the area. They were looking for Rebecca, and they would have found her bags. They didnât.â
âMaybe the men who shot Marshal Cooper let her take her things with her,â she said. âThat would be a good sign, wouldnât it, that they plan to keep her alive?â
âBut they wouldnât want to do that,â he argued. âTheyâd want to silence her as quickly as possible.â
âBecause they think sheâs the witness?â
âYes.â
âHow awful,â she whispered. âPoor Rebecca. She wasnât even there.â
The matter-of-fact comment caught his attention. âShe told Cole and me she was.â
âShe what?â Grace asked, clearly flabbergasted.
âRebecca said she witnessed the robbery. She gave us a detailed accounting of what happened and descriptions of the men she saw.â
âShe couldnât have,â she argued, shaking her head.
âShe could have and she did.â
âIf youâll remember, I told you I was in the bank too. Rebecca was probably just trying to protect Jessica and me and she lied to you.â
âWhy are you assuming she lied?â
Before Grace could answer the question, he said, âJessica also told us she was the witness. She didnât give us any real details, though, but Rebecca did. She told us everything.â
She shook her head again. âNo, that isnât possible.â
âIâm telling you she gave us specific details,â he insisted. âWhatâs wrong?â
âIt doesnât make any sense. Thatâs whatâs wrongâ¦â
She was exasperating. He held on to his patience and asked, âWhy doesnât it?â
âBecause she couldnât have given you details. I promised I would keep silentâ¦. I gave my word ⦠but that was before ⦠and nowâ¦â
âGrace, what are you trying to tell me?â
âRebecca isnât the witness. Jessica is.â
Thirty-Four
Daniel was white with anger. âDo you realize what youâre saying? I swear to God, if youâre lying nowâ¦â
âIâm telling you the truth,â she insisted. âJessica was in the bank during the robbery, not Rebecca.â
He was pacing about the room like a caged animal. He kept telling himself that shouting at Grace wouldnât accomplish anything, but the urge was nearly overwhelming. He took a deep breath and then asked in a chillingly soft voice, âWhy didnât you tell me the truth before? Why in Godâs name did you wait so long?â
âI promised Jessica I wouldnât tell anyone. I gave her my word.â
âDear God,â he muttered. He threaded his fingers through his hair and sat down.
âTry to understand,â she pleaded. âJessica was terrified.â
âDoes Rebecca know that Jessica is the witness?â
âNo, she doesnât.â
âAre you sure?â
âYes.â She turned away then so that she wouldnât have to look at the fury etched on his face. She had never seen him this angry before, and it frightened her.
âNow do you understand why I was so bewildered when you told me Rebecca gave you specific details?â
âAh, Grace,â he whispered as he tried to control his anger.
âDanielââ
He cut her off. âTell me how you know Jessica was in the bank,â he demanded.
âI watched Caleb for her,â she explained. âShe had taken him with her to the bank earlier that afternoon, and he was cranky and out of sorts. She put him down for his nap and then went back.â
âWhy?â
âShe had tried to close her auntâs account, but sheâd left one of the signed documents on Tillyâs kitchen table. Thatâs why she went back.â
âThen what happened?â
âIt was awful,â she whispered. âSheâd run all the way, and when she got to the back door, she started throwing up. She was barely coherent,â she added. âI tried to get her to calm down, but she was out of her mind with terror. I put her to bed and stayed with her until Caleb woke up.â
âWas Tilly there?â
âNo. She had gone out to do some errands. I told her that Jessica had come down with influenza and that she needed to stay in bed and rest.â
A tear slipped down her cheek, and she impatiently wiped it away. âI took care of Caleb the rest of that day, and when it was his bedtime, I took him upstairs and found Jessica frantically packing. She wanted to leave Rockford Falls that night, but I was finally able to convince her to stay.â
âDid she tell you exactly what happened while she was in the bank?â
âYes, she did. After Caleb fell asleep, we went out on the porch and she told me everything but their names.â
He erupted in rage. âAre you telling me she knows their names?â
Grace gripped her hands together. She knew how wrong it had been of her to keep silent and how she had magnified her culpability by adding the lie that she was the witness. Dan
iel would never forgive her. He should arrest her and put her in jail, but she didnât think that would be half as horrible as the guilt she now felt.
âShe heard the man in charge call the others by their names. She didnât see all of them ⦠or hear all their names ⦠just some.â
âWhy in Godâs name didnât she tell Cole or me?â
Desperate to make him understand, she stood up to plead with him. âShe couldnât trust anyone.â
âShe trusted you.â
âYes, she did. I donât know if she would have told me what happened, though, if I hadnât been there in the kitchen when she came back. I saw the condition she was in. She couldnât control her panic, and all she could think about was keeping her son safe. Can you blame her? I would have done the same thing.â
Daniel nodded, for he did understand. âWhat happened then?â
âJessica was sure that the authorities ⦠you ⦠would apprehend the men and wouldnât need an eyewitness. She desperately wanted to believe that would happen.â
âWhen she wanted to run ⦠is that when you suggested she go with you?â
âYes.â
âWhen did she remember sheâd left her bag behind?â
âNot until we heard that one was found under the desk.â
âWhy was it empty?â
âWhen the men came in, she stuffed the money in her dress. She was afraid theyâd take it. She didnât realize they were going toâ¦â
âMassacre them?â
âYes.â
Daniel closed his eyes for a moment. âIf Jessica hadnât left her bag behind, Cole and I would never have known she saw it happen.â
âI donât know if she would have eventually come forward or not,â Grace said. âIt wasnât her bag, though. It was mine. She borrowed it so she would have something to put the money in to carry it home.â
âIt was your bag?â He didnât know why that information infuriated him so, but it did.
âHonest to God, you and Jessica have obstructed this investigation from the very beginning. I ought to lock the two of you in a cell and let you grow old together.â
âWill you please lower your voice? Youâre going to wake up Marshal Cooper.â
âWe want him to wake up,â he roared.
She had had enough of his temper and started for the door. âI wonât let you shout at me, Daniel. I know what I did was wrong, and if you want to arrest me, then do so.â